44 results
Search Results
2. Modern pedagogy, local concerns: the Junkyard on the kibbutz kindergarten.
- Author
-
Golden, Deborah, Aviezer, Ora, and Ziv, Yair
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *KINDERGARTEN , *PLAYGROUNDS , *EARLY childhood education , *CHILDREN , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of education ,KIBBUTZ education ,HISTORY of Kibbutzim - Abstract
This paper focuses on the “Junkyard” (
chatzar grutaot ) - a unique educational environment and practice developed in kindergartens on the Israeli kibbutz in the 1940s and 1950s, and still in wide use today in kibbutz kindergartens. The Junkyard, consisting of artefacts of the adult world that are no longer in use, is an ever-changing set-up in which children’s free play is encouraged, with minimal rules for use of time, space, objects, and social relations. Anchored in the writings of its two founding educators, as well as in writings of and interviews with its advocates and instructors over the years, this paper shows how the Junkyard drew on widespread ideas about early childhood development and education, at the same time as it responded to local conditions and concerns. The paper argues that a unique conjunction of factors - material and structural, educational and pedagogical, ideological and cultural - facilitated the process by which the Junkyard was inserted relatively smoothly into the kibbutz educational landscape, in lasting ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Education and intimate war of position: The National Security League's Committee on Patriotism through Education, 1917–1919.
- Author
-
Schlosser, Kolson
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL security , *PATRIOTISM , *WORLD War I , *MILITARY readiness , *UNITED States education system , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The National Security League was an elite private lobbying group in the World War I preparedness movement in the United States. Its educational wing was a group consisting mostly of college professors called the Committee on Patriotism through Education, which sought to use education to promote a militaristic brand of patriotism. This paper adds to our knowledge of the geopolitics of the period by critically reviewing the Committee's propaganda efforts, as organized into its Patriotism through Education Series. More importantly, this paper theorizes this propaganda by engaging with two literatures that seldom cross paths: emerging interest in intimacy-geopolitics and Gramsci's concept of war of position. Intimacy-geopolitics is used to highlight the performative edge of war propaganda, as it directs desire and affect to toward geopolitical visions which accord with elite visions of the good life. Intimacy-geopolitics as an analytical framework helps connect affect and war in a way that avoids scalar hierarchies of violence. The Committee deliberately sought to direct emotion toward militaristic ends, and saw teachers as foot soldiers in that effort. Understanding how war propaganda works through affect, that is, how it positions country as an object of affection, also qualifies and dovetails with an understanding of war propaganda as elemental to the Gramscian war of position. Quite apart from accusations of war-profiteering, elite manipulation of desire and affect toward the war effort also worked to obfuscate class interest in favor of gender and other social roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. 'The history of the Ouinkai' -- the alumni association of the Tokyo higher normal school for women: a milestone in Japan's education for women.
- Author
-
Sasaki, Keiko
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *WOMEN'S colleges , *EDUCATION , *ALUMNI associations , *YOUNG adults , *HIGHER education , *TWENTIETH century , *WOMEN'S history , *HISTORY ,HISTORY of Tokyo, Japan ,JAPANESE history - Abstract
The book, The History of the Ouinkai, was published in 1940 as a commemorative project for the 60th anniversary of the Tokyo Higher Normal School for Women (THNSW). The purpose of this article is to illustrate the type of data collected in the surveys and their findings, to explore some of the activities of the association, and to discuss how the Ouinkai alumni association, in collaboration with THNSW, worked with female teachers nationwide. The paper traces some of the multi-norms and multi-roles for female teachers that THNSW promoted and their relation to norms thought to characterise 'ideal' Japanese women. The publication of The History of the Ouinkai was a milestone in Japanese women's education because it demonstrated the Ouinkai's successes in respect of Japanese educational policy for women as well as the leadership that the Ouinkai provided to female graduate teachers, whom it organised with skill. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Emancipation, marketisation, and social protection: the female subject within vocational training policy in Canada, 1960–1990.
- Author
-
Pullman, Ashley
- Subjects
- *
OCCUPATIONAL training for women , *EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATION , *VOCATIONAL education of women , *FEMINISM & higher education , *GENDER inequality , *HIGHER education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *POLITICAL attitudes ,CANADIAN politics & government - Abstract
This paper examines Canadian federal and cross-provincial higher education policy from 1960 to 1990, a critical time when provisions for vocational and adult training came under the auspices of governmental concern, justified under both an economic rationale and as a way to address persistent forms of inequality. The problematisation of skill during this period had particular gendered implications, as addressing inequality through education subsidies intersected with the perceived training needs of employers and the market. Employing Nancy Fraser's theory of a ‘triple movement’, the following paper ‘takes stock’ of how the three political forces of social movements, marketisation, and social protection have shaped gendered discourses of education and training, the implications for which are of continued relevance to those trying to understand the education and training within the contemporary neo-liberal state. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Past/forward policy-making: transforming Chinese engineering education since the Reform and Opening-up.
- Author
-
Zhu, Qin, Jesiek, Brent K., and Gong, Yu
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of education , *EDUCATION , *ENGINEERING education , *HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATIONAL objectives , *CURRICULUM , *TRAINING of engineers , *TWENTIETH century ,CHINESE politics & government - Abstract
Although engineering education has played important roles in China’s growing power and influence on the world stage, engineering education policy since the Reform and Opening-up in the late 1970s has not been well documented in current English-language scholarship. Informed by historical and sociological studies of education, engineering and engineering education, this paper attempts to address this scholarly gap by relating contemporary Chinese engineering education policy-making to its broader historical, cultural and ideological contexts. Based on analysis of policy documents and reports released by the Chinese government and engineering schools, and drawing on prior scholarship of Chinese (engineering) education policy, this paper employs the concept of ‘past/forward’ as an analytic lens to interpret and understand four major areas of engineering education policy change in contemporary China: institutional reform, disciplines and majors, training objectives, and curriculum reform. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The mid-twentieth century fertility boom from a global perspective.
- Author
-
Reher, David and Requena, Miguel
- Subjects
- *
FERTILITY , *BABY boom generation , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
During the central decades of the twentieth century there is ample though often indirect evidence that a significant rise in fertility took place in much of the world. In some countries with historic demographic transitions this trend change has been called the baby boom. Elsewhere it has often been called the demographic explosion. Seldom has it been addressed from a global perspective. The main goal of this paper is to study these shifts comparatively, assessing the extent to which the timing and the mechanisms behind increasing fertility were or were not shared by different areas of the world. The paper provides a detailed description of fertility trends in 13 countries from four continents, based on a cohort approach to fertility and making use of data from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series, International (IPUMS-I). Our analysis shows that, with some exceptions, increasing fertility was a global demographic phenomenon, although there are important variations in terms of intensity, timing, and duration. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The education of Walter Kohn and the creation of density functional theory.
- Author
-
Zangwill, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
PHYSICISTS , *HOHENBERG-Kohn theorem , *DENSITY functional theory , *SOLID state physics , *QUANTUM chemistry , *TWENTIETH century , *EDUCATION , *HISTORY - Abstract
The theoretical solid-state physicist Walter Kohn was awarded one-half of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his mid-1960s creation of an approach to the many-particle problem in quantum mechanics called density functional theory (DFT). In its exact form, DFT establishes that the total charge density of any system of electrons and nuclei provides all the information needed for a complete description of that system. This was a breakthrough for the study of atoms, molecules, gases, liquids, and solids. Before DFT, it was thought that knowledge of the vastly more complicated many-electron wave function was essential for a complete description of such systems. Today, 50 years after its introduction, DFT (in one of its approximate forms) is the method of choice used by most scientists to calculate the physical properties of materials of all kinds. In this paper, I present a biographical essay of Kohn's educational experiences and professional career up to and including the creation of DFT. My account begins with Kohn's student years in Austria, England, and Canada during World War II and continues with his graduate and postgraduate training at Harvard University and Niels Bohr's Institute for Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen. I then study the research choices he made during the first 10 years of his career (when he was a faculty member at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and a frequent visitor to the Bell Telephone Laboratories) in the context of the theoretical solid-state physics agenda of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Subsequent sections discuss his move to the University of California, San Diego, identify the research issue which led directly to DFT, and analyze the two foundational papers of the theory. The paper concludes with an explanation of how the chemists came to award 'their' Nobel Prize to the physicist Kohn and a discussion of why he was unusually well suited to create the theory in the first place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Hungarian-Russian bilingual schools in Hungary during the Soviet occupation (1945-1989).
- Author
-
Vamos, Agnes
- Subjects
- *
BILINGUAL schools , *EDUCATION , *HISTORY of education policy , *BILINGUAL education , *RUSSIAN language education , *LANGUAGE policy , *CHILDREN , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of education ,HUNGARIAN history, 1945-1989 - Abstract
Through the example of the establishment, functioning, and closing of bilingual schools during the Soviet occupation of Hungary, this paper aims to introduce this segment of public education in Central-Eastern Europe. In the period between 1945 and 1989, the learning of Russian as a compulsory subject was introduced, teaching other languages was restricted, and Hungarian-Russian bilingual schools were launched. The features of their establishment can be connected to political and professional power relations in different sub-periods within the structures of closed language policy. The objective in both states was the education of committed political elite. The first school was established by direct political control and closed because of the 1956 revolution. The second school was established in 1974, through professional and political compromises. The third school opened at the end of the period, as part of a top-down development project involving 14 schools. A number of European target languages (still including Russian) were introduced, which can be regarded as the opening up of language education policy. Relying on sources, documents, and personal recollections, the study aims to reveal the dynamics of the interrelations between controlled language education, University and the changes in Hungarian economic, social, domestic, and foreign policy in the given periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The pedagogical foundations of primary school inspector Leonor Serrano (1914-1939).
- Author
-
Ortells Roca, Miguel and Traver Martí, Juan
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *SCHOOL inspectors (Educational quality) , *PHILOSOPHY of education , *PRIMARY schools , *FEMINISM & education , *WOMEN in education , *PRIMARY education , *CHILDREN , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
This article aims to reconstruct the pedagogy of Leonor Serrano, a Spanish school inspector working and developing her theories between 1914 and 1939. We use an interrogative-analytical methodology based on content analysis of her texts to reconstruct her educational theory. The theoretical deductive elements are uncovered in the analysis of the answers Leonor Serrano gives to the “basic questions of education”, issues that provide the bases for the scientific field of the theory of education to define a specific pedagogy and are identified through a process of historical-educational review. The study outcome is an explanatory narrative. The paper ends with a discussion of the method and the results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. La escuela rural en territorio seri, 1920-1957.
- Author
-
Ramírez Zavala, Ana Luz
- Subjects
- *
RURAL schools , *EDUCATION , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
The Seris are an indigenous group that inhabits the central coast of Sonora, Mexico, identified historically as hunter-gatherers and fishers. They were educated under the rural schools program implemented by the federal government in the 1920s. From a regional perspective, this paper explores the scope of this cultural/educational policy to elucidate the factors that led to its implementation, arguing that the rural education aimed at indigenous peoples was determined through negotiations by intermediaries; in this case, ranchers, teachers, local merchants and members of religious associations who sought to adjust the educational programs to this community's existing cultural conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Unholy Alliances? Language Exams, Loyalty, and Identification in Interwar Romania.
- Author
-
Egry, Gábor
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL alliances , *LANGUAGE exams , *EDUCATION , *MINORITIES , *GOVERNMENT executives , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
This article analyzes national loyalty and identification by examining the language exams administered to minority public officials in Romania in 1934 and 1935. The exams aimed at testing officials' knowledge of the state language, but given the broader political context they were more than a survey of linguistic skills. Examinees were singled out as non-Romanian and subjected to an additional requirement not demanded from their ethnic Romanian colleagues, interpreting the use of the official language as a sign of loyalty. Drawing upon theories of loyalty as a historical concept, the paper analyzes how the particular situation of minority public officials was reflected in these texts and how they created a specific identification for themselves, composed of important elements of their minority ethnicity but also expressing their identification with the state and its modernizing goals as members of a unified, professional public body. The language exams signaled the emergence of a specific category of minority public servants who were part of both the minority group and the middle-class functionaries of the Romanian state. Nationalist public discourse on both sides--Romanian and minority--have denied and erased the history of these hybrid loyalties and identities, but the languages exams help us to recover them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The role of parental education in child disability in China from 1987 to 2006.
- Author
-
He, Ping, Chen, Gong, Wang, Zhenjie, Guo, Chao, and Zheng, Xiaoying
- Subjects
- *
CHILDREN with disabilities , *PARENTING education , *EDUCATION , *CARE of children with disabilities , *SURVEYS , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper aimed to investigate the role of parental education in child disability in China. We used nationally representative data from China’s National Sample Survey on Disability, iterated twice, in 1987 and 2006, with data of 764,718 children aged 0–14 years. Logit models were used for statistical analysis. Results showed that the prevalence of child disability was significantly associated with each parent’s education. Maternal education was more important than paternal education in child disability in both surveys. The analysis of marginal effect indicated a one-year increase in maternal and paternal schooling led to an average decrease of 0.121% and 0.091% in the probability of child disability in 1987, and 19 years later, these figures had dwindled to 0.091% and 0.072%, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Rethinking Taiwanese nationality and subjectivity: implications from language issues in colonial Taiwan in the 1920s.
- Author
-
Huang, Hsuan-Yi
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *HISTORY education , *CURRICULUM , *CULTURAL nationalism , *SUBJECTIVITY , *LANGUAGE policy , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,JAPANESE occupation of Taiwan, 1895-1945 ,HISTORY of Taiwan - Abstract
This historical study reflects on history curriculum debates over the last 20 years in Taiwan. To open up possibilities for contemporary Taiwanese to rethink themselves in terms of national culture and subjectivity, this paper explores the construction of Taiwanese subjectivity in the past. It focuses on the history of Taiwan under Japanese occupation as a key issue in history curriculum debates. Particularly, it examines language issues in the 1920s, an important theme in the histories of the formation of Taiwanese consciousness, ideology, and cultural nationalism during the Japanese colonial period. Rather than addressing issues of identity (national or cultural), identifying who Taiwanese really were, or looking for Chinese or Taiwanese consciousness, this study explores how meanings of “Taiwanese” in the 1920s under Japanese occupation were constructed in the discourse of language reform for civilisation. The analysis of the New Culture Movement discourse suggests that the classical Chinese language ofHànwénas a valuable cultural resource and flexible linguistic instrument played an essential role in constituting Taiwanese subjectivities that shaped Taiwanese practices of the self for distinctive civilisation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Afterword. Anarchism, texts and children: active conversations with the past.
- Author
-
Fielding, Michael
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of education , *HISTORY of anarchism , *EDUCATION , *EXPERIMENTAL methods in education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *HISTORIOGRAPHY - Abstract
In appreciating and responding to the three symposium papers on “Anarchism, Texts and Children”, a case is made for what John Berger has called “the honour of an alternative”, for affirmation as well as for refusal. Not only should we respond positively and imaginatively to Colin Ward’s call for “counter-history” of our own making, we should also extend our advocacy of alternatives through the adventure of more creative historical methodologies. Lastly, in the spirit of Berger’s writing, this Afterword celebrates the capacity of all three papers not just to speak to issues of enduring human importance, but to do so imaginatively and eloquently, thereby refusing and subverting the increasingly dreary hegemony of academic writing disgracefully in thrall to the diminishing calculus of neo-liberalism. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Promotion of Education in Pakistan: The Role of an English man, G.D Langland.
- Author
-
Fakhr-ul-Islam
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *EDUCATORS , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
Education in Pakistan in general and in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in particular is faced with multifarious problems. Apart from endeavors by the government, some individuals are also putting in their efforts for promotion of education. One such individual is a foreign luminary, Geoffrey Douglas Langland. This 95 years old English man is settled in Pakistan right from the inception of the country in 1947. Holding the rank of Major in British Army, he spent a couple of years during 1947-54 in Pakistan Army training section, and then switched over to education in 1954. He served at Aitcheson College Lahore, Cadet College Razmak and finally made Chitral as his abode. In Chitral he established Langlands School and College in 1989. He contributed a lot to education in Pakistan during the past 58 years. In this paper, an attempt has been made to introduce that legendry character and his meritorious services, to Pakistani people in particular and rest of the world in general. Most part of the paper pertains to oral history as a large amount of information has been gathered from interviews with Langlands and people associated with him one way or the other. Few secondary sources such as books, reports and websites have also been consulted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
17. Activism, agency and archive: British activists and the representation of educational colonies in Spain during and after the Spanish Civil War.
- Author
-
Roberts, Siân
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *BRITISH people , *IMAGE , *ACTIVISTS , *ARCHIVES , *BRITISH humanitarian assistance , *CHILDREN , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of education ,INTERNATIONAL brigades in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939 ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
In the late 1930s the Spanish Civil War captured the international imagination to an extraordinary degree. As in other countries British men and women were moved to intervene directly and the memory of the war, and of British participation in it, has held an enduring appeal in the UK. The Civil War was also notable for its use of the visual as a weapon of propaganda, and the Spanish Republican Government deployed visual imagery to great effect as an instrument through which it exhibited its progressive educational and welfare reforms to an international audience. This article focuses on the visual and textual representations of displaced children in Republican educational colonies in Spain that are preserved in British archive collections. Taking as its starting point a series of photographs of children in colonies gathered together as part of the International Brigade Memorial Archive in London, the paper will consider the construction, use, and circulation of these images and associated texts by British and American political and humanitarian networks and their subsequent collection and preservation in British archival institutions. The paper will assess the effectiveness of the images and texts as pedagogical and political agents and explore how their meaning shifted as they travelled through a range of performative spaces on a journey from their construction as artefacts designed initially to record and communicate the Spanish Republic’s progressive educational project, to commemorative objects in the archive. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. “Willing enthusiasts” or “lame ducks”? Issues in teacher professional development policy in England and Wales 1910–1975.
- Author
-
Robinson, Wendy and Bryce, Marie
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *TEACHERS , *TEACHER development , *IN-service training of teachers , *CAREER development , *PROFESSIONAL identity , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
Though there is a well-established body of research in the field of teacher professional development, it is characterised by a real dearth of any detailed historical analysis. This paper seeks to address this gap, by offering a new historical analysis of a case study of the evolution of organised teacher professional development in England and Wales during the twentieth century. Its approach is hoped to open up the wider debate and to contribute to a fuller understanding of the basis for those questions and dilemmas about teacher professional development that have long exercised teachers, professional educators and policy-makers – questions which turn on fundamental issues of priorities and purpose, funding, scale of teacher engagement, control and reach. The paper is in three main parts. Firstly, the scope of the case study is outlined with key stages in the evolution of teacher professional development in England and Wales identified. Secondly, four themes from the data which characterised this evolution are discussed. These include the restricted engagement of teachers relative to the whole teacher population; limited funding; the highly centralised control over provision for teacher professional development through Her Majesty’s Inspectorate (HMI); and a highly selective and restrictive access to provision by teachers. It is argued that these key characteristics helped to shape a particular culture and ideology of teacher professional development which was dependent on a select cadre of elite teachers for the dissemination and modelling of what was regarded as good practice, so as to improve their colleagues’ performance – the elite excelled while the majority needed to be saved from mediocrity. The particular ideology underlying this model is conceptualised as one of ‘excellence and salvation’. Finally, it is argued that the key issues identified in this story (the restricted engagement of teachers; limited funding; highly centralised control; and ideologies of excellence) raise important generic questions for the field of teacher professional development more widely as well as framing future historical analysis of teacher professional development. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Americanisation, sovietisation, and resistance at Kabul University: limits of the educational reforms.
- Author
-
Tsvetkova, Natalia
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *HISTORY of imperialism , *AMERICANIZATION , *EDUCATIONAL change , *EDUCATION policy , *HIGHER education , *YOUNG adults , *TWENTIETH century ,KABUL University (Kabul, Afghanistan) ,AFGHANISTAN history - Abstract
The paper compares the American and Soviet transformations at Kabul University, Afghanistan, during the 1960s to the 1980s explained in terms of Americanisation and Sovietisation. Using new declassified documents from both American and former Soviet archives, the author reveals that both powers attempted to impose their rival models of university education in Afghanistan. However, resistance on the part of the Afghan university undermined both of their cultural influences, thus causing their policies of reform to eventually fail. The case of Kabul University demonstrates the inability of the superpowers to encourage the formation of pliable students and professors. Despite crucial transformations in the structure, administration apparatus, and content of disciplines, both superpowers were not able to change the traditions and values of professors and students. The university community has been proven to be the main cause for the success or failure of any reforms brought to a university by external powers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. EDUCATION AS A CONTINUATION OF REVOLUTION: EVERYDAY LIFE AND THE COMMUNIST EDUCATION OF PETTY URBANITES IN 1930S CHINA.
- Author
-
FENG MIAO
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNISM , *EVERYDAY life , *CITY dwellers , *INTELLECTUALS , *COMMUNISTS , *EDUCATION , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of communism , *HISTORY , *REVOLUTIONS ,CHINESE history - Abstract
This paper explores the context and the process by which culture became integral to revolution in the early years of the Chinese Communist Revolution. It draws attention to the educational program that a group of urban-based Communist intellectuals initiated among urban laborers and other workers after the Nationalist Party's suppression of the Communist labor movement in 1927. Rather than an economic and political revolution, these Communists envisioned a "cultural and thought movement" that would transform laborers' ways of seeing and living everyday life. By guiding workers' literary writings and provoking social scientific and philosophical discussions, they worked to transform workers' consciousness about their everyday experiences. They believed this consciousness would engender resistance to capitalist oppression in incremental and concrete ways and that a political and economic revolution would emerge from these daily actions at an opportune time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Assimilating Korea: Japanese Protestants, “East Asian Christianity” and the education of Koreans in Japan, 1905–1920.
- Author
-
Neuhaus, Dolf-Alexander
- Subjects
- *
PROTESTANTS , *CHRISTIAN missionaries , *IMPERIALISM , *IMPERIALISM & religion , *KOREAN students in foreign countries , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of education ,JAPANESE colonies ,JAPANESE occupation of Korea, 1910-1945 - Abstract
This article sets out to elucidate the role of Japanese Protestants in the education of Koreans during the early twentieth century. Scholarship has often assigned only marginal roles to Japanese Protestants within the history of Japanese imperialism, despite the remarkable success of western missionaries in Korea at the time. As imperial expansion progressed, Japanese Protestants intensified their efforts to take up a leading role in the education of Koreans in colonial Korea and in the metropole wishing to spearhead the assimilation of Koreans. By drawing on the colonial discourses of East Asian unity under Japanese leadership, Protestant churches strove to mediate and facilitate colonial policies in Korea. Yet there were also voices of dissent from prominent Japanese Protestants critical of the assimilation policies implemented by colonial authorities in Korea. This ambivalent stance of Protestantism towards Korea is further complicated by the fact that the Korean Young Men’s Christian Association in Tokyo served as an important venue of the Korean Independence Movement. Examining Christian magazines and journals of the time, this paper delves into the contentious debates among Japanese Protestants concerning the Korea Mission and the Japanese government’s strategy of assimilation through education. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Models of academic governance during a period of nationbuilding: the Hebrew University in the 1920s-1960s.
- Author
-
Cohen, Uri and Sapir, Adi
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *NATION building , *HISTORY of university & college administration , *JEWISH diaspora , *HIGHER education , *EDUCATION , *TWENTIETH century , *UNIVERSITY faculty , *JEWISH history , *HISTORY ,ISRAELI politics & government - Abstract
This paper explores the development of the structures of university governance at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem between the 1920s and 1960s. The model that ultimately prevailed, a state-sponsored model of governance, dominated the higher education system in Israel until the early 2000s and was characterised by the dominance of academic faculty, a status that the government accorded to the faculty in exchange for their acceptance of the state's normative vision for universities' role in society. Two main governance models that were instituted at the HU are identified: (1) the Diaspora university, 1925-1950, a distinctive governance model that emerged in the pre-state period and was controlled by Jewish communities in the Diaspora, and (2) the state university, 1950s-2000s, which shifted the centre of gravity to the state. These models are further divided into sub-models and the processes described through which academic autonomy was institutionalised during a period of nation-building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Emotional indoctrination through sentimental narrative in Spanish primary education textbooks during the Franco dictatorship (1939-1959).
- Author
-
Mahamud, Kira
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATION , *TEXTBOOKS , *INDOCTRINATION , *NARRATIVES , *EMOTIONS -- Social aspects , *PRIMARY education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,SOCIAL aspects ,SOCIOLOGY of love - Abstract
This paper aims to highlight the prominence and relevance attached by the Franco dictatorial regime to emotions and sentiments in primary education textbooks. The authors of school textbooks employed a singular writing style, which enabled them to permeate the regime's ideology within the primary education community and classroom. Overcoming the censorship of their textbooks lent the authors a measure of authority derived from the government, increasing the schoolbook's relevance as the instructional resource par excellence. The sentimental narrative, reinforced by figurative, pseudo-poetic language and precise instructions on how and what to feel, represents prescriptive texts and reveals the objective of emotionally homogenising and indoctrinating the children in order to socialise them politically and religiously, moulding their socio-political self and identity within the pattern established. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The response of the Roman Catholic Church to the introduction of vocational education in Ireland 1930-1942.
- Author
-
Clarke, Marie
- Subjects
- *
CHURCH schools , *CHURCH & education , *CHURCH & state , *VOCATIONAL education , *EDUCATION , *EDUCATION policy , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This paper discusses the manner in which the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland attempted to impose denominational control on the system of vocational education introduced by the state in 1930. Considerable research on education has been conducted within the period in question; however, the area addressed in this paper has been largely neglected by scholars in the field. The position of the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland is examined in the context of Church-state relations within Europe with particular reference to the issue of control in education. The paper argues that the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland sought denominational control over vocational education through the introduction of various amendments to legislation dealing with the system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Ethnic segregation in Malaysia's education system: enrolment choices, preferential policies and desegregation.
- Author
-
Raman, SanthiramR. and Sua, Tan Yao
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *EDUCATIONAL equalization laws , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *EDUCATION policy , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *MANNERS & customs , *SOCIAL history ,MALAYSIAN politics & government - Abstract
Ethnic segregation has become an emerging feature in Malaysia's education system even though the institutional role of education should have been a unifying force for the country's multi-ethnic society. The underlying problem is that, at all levels of education provision in Malaysia, alternative streams are allowed to coexist alongside mainstream education provided by the government. Alarmingly, these alternative streams are not reinforcing what mainstream education is trying to do: foster ethnic integration. Instead, the alternative streams have become divided along ethnic lines. This paper looks at the development of Malaysia's education system and examines two main factors that have contributed to the current state of ethnic segregation: enrolment choices and preferential policies. These two factors have in one way or another helped to strengthen the coexistence of alternative streams alongside mainstream education from which ethnic segregation emerges. These alternative streams have become competing rather than supplementary/complementary forces capable of challenging mainstream education. This paper explains how these two factors contribute to ethnic segregation at all levels of education notwithstanding their causal relationships at certain levels of education. Second, it evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of the measures taken by the Malaysian government to desegregate the education system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Educating tomorrow’s media workers: television instruction at American institutions of higher learning, 1945–1960.
- Author
-
VanCour, Shawn
- Subjects
- *
TELEVISION broadcasting education in universities & colleges , *HIGHER education , *TELEVISION broadcasting employees , *HUMANITIES education , *PROFESSIONALIZATION , *MASS media employees , *MASS media industry , *TRAINING , *HISTORY , *EMPLOYEES , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
This paper explores the rise of programs in television instruction in the USA during broadcasting’s postwar expansion period. Beginning in professional schools, television training entered the university first through extension school courses, then in full degree programs. This transition to institutions of higher learning entailed key shifts in demographics, pedagogical orientation, and legitimation strategies, while embroiling television in larger struggles over the shifting boundaries of the postwar humanities. Studying the education of early television workers, I argue, raises key questions about processes of worker professionalization vital for developing research on media industries and media labor. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The system of textbook approval in Poland under communist rule (1944–1989) as a tool of power of the regime.
- Author
-
Wojdon, Joanna
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION , *HISTORY of education policy , *COMMUNISM , *TEXTBOOKS , *TEXTBOOK publishing , *EDUCATIONAL publishing , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century ,POLISH history -- 20th century - Abstract
This paper analyses the process of production and regulation of school textbooks in Poland under communist rule. The stages of textbook approval were as follows: selection of authors; editorial work at the publishing house; discussions in the commissions of the Ministry of Education; decisions of the censorship office. It is argued that the Polish United Workers’ Party (i.e. the Polish communist party) played a dominant role at every step of this process. The question of possible influence of the Soviet communists is also addressed. Some changes in the textbook approval process are traced in time, with emphasis put on sustainability of the principle of dominant position of the party. The constraints of power of the communist regime in the field of education are briefly discussed, with the human factor given most serious consideration. There had always been a shortage of people, from the party’s point of view, ready to implement rules, and far too many of those who undermined them. This analysis is based on the archival holdings of the Ministry of Education of the People’s Republic of Poland and of the censorship office. Teachers’ press and other publications dealing with school textbooks and history of education in the People’s Poland have also been used. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The development of Chinese education in Malaysia, 1952–1975: political collaboration between the Malaysian Chinese Association and the Chinese educationists.
- Author
-
Tan, Yao Sua and Teoh, Hooi See
- Subjects
- *
COOPERATION , *EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATION , *POLITICAL participation , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,CHINESE Malaysians - Abstract
This paper examines the development of Chinese education in Malaysia from 1952 to 1975, focusing on the political collaboration between the Malaysian Chinese Association (MCA) and the Chinese educationists to advance the cause of Chinese education instead of the usual macro policy analysis. This collaboration was compounded by the different stand adopted by the MCA and the Chinese educationists on issues relating to Chinese education. This different stand reflected the MCA’s political limitations to advance the cause of Chinese education. The MCA had to abide by the elite accommodation model adopted by the coalition government since it was a partner of this coalition. Such an accommodative approach could not meet the assertive demand of the Chinese educationists on issues relating to Chinese education. Meanwhile, the political collaboration between the MCA and the Chinese educationists was also constrained by internal conflict within the MCA that compromised the interests of Chinese education. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Liberals, Conservatives and Romantic Nationalists in interwar education policy in Greece: The High Mountains episode.
- Author
-
Athanasiades, Harris
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATION , *INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) , *MODERN Greek language , *NATIONALISM , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
Greek historiography of interwar education policy unproblematically accepts the assumption that the bone of contention between the ‘Liberal demoticists’ and the ‘Conservative purists’ was the language issue; particularly whetherdemoticorkatharevousashould be the language of instruction in schooling. This paper aims to challenge this assumption arguing that neither were the camps as homogeneous as has been traditionally assumed nor was the language what ultimately provoked the controversy. What was at stake here was the national and social ideology of education. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Retaining public and political trust: teacher education in Scotland.
- Author
-
Gray, Donald and Weir, Douglas
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATION , *EDUCATIONAL change , *HIGHER education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *SOCIAL history ,SCOTTISH politics & government - Abstract
This paper traces the key periods, players and events which have contributed to the shaping of the current landscape of teacher education in Scotland. Starting with the Wheatley Report and the formation of the General Teaching Council (Scotland) in the 1960s through to the most recent Donaldson Review of Teacher Education, we examine ebb and flow amongst GTCS, government, colleges of education and universities. Following its own trajectory, Scottish Education resisted and rejected policies emanating from an ‘English’ ideology, capitalised on respect for and influence of the GTCS, and successfully moved teacher education’s base from autonomous colleges to high-status universities. At the core of teacher education in Scotland is the continuing desire for partnership-working amongst key stakeholders: local and national government, GTCS, schools, teacher education institutions, teaching unions, parents and pupils. A teaching profession of trained graduates, underpinned by university-led subject study, is now moving steadily towards Masters-level professional learning for all. Although having faced some troubled episodes, this period has also been characterised by remarkable stability and consensus and, although still tackling the improvement agenda suggested by the recent Donaldson review, teacher education in Scotland has retained a high degree of public and political trust. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Co-operatives and education in the Basque Country: the ikastolas in the final years of Franco’s dictatorship.
- Author
-
Delgado, Ander
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATION , *BASQUES , *EDUCATIONAL change , *HISTORY of schools , *FRANCOISM , *CHILDREN , *BASIC education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,SPANISH history, 1939-1975 - Abstract
This article analyses the creation of the schools called ikastolas throughout the Basque Country from the 1960s onwards. The name ikastola refers to a unique school model whose major characteristic is to teach the majority of subjects in the Basque language, or euskera. It outlines the reasons why some of these schools took a co-operative organisational form and describes their major characteristics. The first part analyses the opportunities created under the Francoist regime for this kind of school, despite the repressive character of the dictatorship in other fields. The second part of the paper examines the important influence of the Mondragón co-operative movement, especially through its financial institution, in the creation of these educational co-operatives. The third and last part emphasises the role played by social mobilisation in defence of the Basque language in the creation of these schools and how this factor tied in with a co-operative governance system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Problems, survival and transformation: religious education in Scotland – a historical review, 1962–1992.
- Author
-
Matemba, Yonah Hisbon
- Subjects
- *
RELIGIOUS education , *HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATION , *HISTORY of educational change , *RELIGION & education , *CHRISTIAN education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,SCOTTISH history - Abstract
This paper is an examination of the history of Scottish religious education (RE). Focusing on 1962–1992, it distinguishes the temporal processes that unfolded during this period to identify the circumstances that led to a serious case of neglect of the subject, especially in the non-denominational sector. Next, it highlights the less emphasised but important issue of how RE ‘survived’ in public education, going on to explicate the antecedents of a paradigm shift in the subject. Finally, curriculum reforms undertaken in the subject from the 1980s onwards are described, showing how these reforms helped to transform Scottish RE into an ‘academic’ subject well aligned with the curricular principles of ‘5–14’, the country’s first (1992) ‘educational’ RE programme. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The reaction against conventional knowledge in higher education.
- Author
-
Anderson, Gordon L.
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *GENERAL education , *SOCIAL sciences , *TRADITIONAL knowledge , *BABY boom generation , *TWENTIETH century , *EDUCATION , *HISTORY - Abstract
Purpose – Liberal education should consist of a healthy dynamic of mastering and transcending received traditions. This paper aims to discuss this point.Design/methodology/approach – This article discusses the inherent tension between the concepts of “liberal” and “education,” where “education” involves imparting conventional knowledge and “liberal” involves freeing the mind from it.Findings – With the rise of the social sciences and the maturation of the baby-boomers, higher education in the twentieth century gained a general bias against traditional knowledge. This bias is reflected in higher education becoming more jobs oriented, more ideological, and relativistic in values.Practical implications – Higher education should consist of greater integration of historical aspects of education pushed aside in the twentieth-century while continuing its transformation through new scientific research, making twenty-first century education more genuinely liberal.Originality/value – The required transformation will be difficult for many baby-boomers now in positions of authority in higher education who rejected conventional knowledge in the 1960s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Scientific Strategy and Ad Hoc Response: The Problem of Typhoid in America and England, c. 1910–50.
- Author
-
Hardy, Anne
- Subjects
- *
TYPHOID fever , *PUBLIC health , *DRINKING water , *INFECTION , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *CARRIER state (Communicable diseases) , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of public health - Abstract
In the early twentieth century, death rates from typhoid in European cities reached an all time low. By contrast, death rates in America were six times as high, and the American public health community began a crusade against the disease in 1912. In the 1920s, hopes for greater control of the disease focused not just on sewers and drinking water supplies, but on the newly established scientific means of immunization, the supervision of food-related pathways of infection, and the management of healthy carriers. The management of carriers, which lay at the core of any typhoid control program, proved an intractable problem, and typhoid remained a public health concern. America and England both struggled with control of the disease during the interwar period. Coming from different starting points, however, their approaches to the problem differed. This paper compares and contrasts these different public health strategies, considers the variable quality of support provided by bacteriological laboratories, and demonstrates that “accidental” typhoid outbreaks continued to happen up to the outbreak of World War II. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Labour Universities: physical education and the indoctrination of the working class.
- Author
-
Delgado-Granados, Patricia and Ramírez-Macías, Gonzalo
- Subjects
- *
PHYSICAL education -- History , *HISTORY of education of the working class , *HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATION , *SPORTS , *SOCIAL classes , *IDEOLOGY & society , *YOUTH , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This paper explores the role of physical education in Labour Universities (1955–1978) during Franco’s regime as an instrument of indoctrination and declassing of the working class. The conclusions obtained after the study and the analysis of various primary sources indicate that, initially, physical education was used as an instrument of indoctrination for the purposes of achieving the social and ideological model of Franco’s regime after the Fascist uprising (1936–1939). However, this initial orientation became less relevant in the 1960s, in favour of the inherent aspects of sport, which contributed to the declassing of the young workers. In fact, Labour Universities became national benchmarks in the area of sports within the education system. Physical education lost its indoctrinating and declassing roles after the General Law of Education was passed in 1970, and the focus shifted instead to its role as an activity for participation, education and comprehensive training. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Crisis of the 'Disadvantaged Child': Poverty Research, IQ, and Muppet Diplomacy in the 1960s.
- Author
-
Jackson, Paul S. B.
- Subjects
- *
POVERTY in the United States , *INTELLIGENCE tests , *PRESCHOOL education , *HEAD Start programs , *EDUCATIONAL television programs , *RACE & society , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,POPULATION history - Abstract
In the early 1960s, the US federal government deemed poverty to be a national crisis, and actively intervened to solve this problem. My question for this article is how did preschool education become a key site to remedy this crisis? Government interventions were a combination of poverty research, racialized politics, and child development. I show how the discipline of early childhood education cohered around the term 'disadvantaged child', in turn influencing the War on Poverty policies, including the basis of Head Start preschool education. During this same decade proponents of Sesame Street-with private funding, along with extensive testing mechanisms by consultants-argued that the television could reach more children, therefore be more cost effective. This paper investigates how surplus populations became determined and demarcated, as early as three years old. I question how televised preschool taught 'affective skills' and proper social relations during times of political crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Tradition and modernity of the De La Salle Schools: the case of the Basque Country in Franco’s Spain (1937–1975).
- Author
-
Dávila, Paulí, Naya, LuisM., and Murua, Hilario
- Subjects
- *
RELIGION & education , *MONASTICISM & religious orders , *EDUCATION , *CATHOLIC education , *FRANCOISM , *MODERNITY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The Congregation of the Brothers of Christian Schools (the De La Salle Brothers) has grown since its arrival in Spain in 1878, and today it is the second most important Congregation – in terms of the number of students and schools – in the private school sector in Spain. This article aims to present, first, the educational contributions of De La Salle, which are based upon discipline, Catholic schooling and popular education. This pedagogical approach became the foundation of traditional education, and was a success in their schools and a model for other institutions. Second, our study is focused on the situation of the De La Salle schools in the Basque Country during the Franco regime. The case of the Basque Country is very important, because it showed a significant increase in centres for vocational training and secondary education. The paper concludes that the De La Salle schools make up a Catholic school model adapted to the educational and social reality of the Basque Country and that, during the Franco regime, the model went through a period which balanced tradition and modernity regarding educational provision. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Christian commentary and education 1930–1960.
- Author
-
Arthur, James
- Subjects
- *
CHURCH & education , *RELIGIOUS studies , *CHRISTIANITY , *BRITISH education system , *CHRISTIAN apologetics , *HISTORY , *SECULAR education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
This article presents the scope and range of Christian involvement in establishing the field of education in England as a distinct area for scholarship between 1930 and 1960. It advocates greater study of the range of various denominational positions held in the period. This paper also illustrates the public debates of the time by focusing on the examples of a number of prominent educationists in leadership positions who were directly associated with the founding and running of major British education journals and societies. This article uses newly released personal archival records not previously available to accounts of the period. It begins by situating their perspectives in the wider historical context, particularly the intellectual background of ideas that influenced and set the tone for their work. It then introduces some of their beliefs and assumptions, as well as their achievements and failures, in the realm of religion and education. It reviews and critiques their different Christian conceptualisations of education, and offers reasons why they failed to make a lasting Christian impact on the subject under a newly emergent secular culture in the 1960s. This article argues that researchers have generally neglected the influence of Christianity in the early establishment of education as a discrete area of academic study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Disputas y negociaciones en el campo pedagógico argentino. Influencia de los saberes escolanovistas sobre el sistema educativo público nacional, 1930-1943.
- Author
-
Varela, Paola
- Subjects
- *
ALTERNATIVE education , *EDUCATION , *HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATIONAL innovations , *EDUCATION & politics , *PUBLIC education , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This study tries to make a revision of the conflicts, negotiations and coexistences that characterized the configuration of the pedagogical field in Argentina during the 1930s, as well as recognizing the place that the New School occupied in it. This school of thought was not totally consistent as a whole: in fact, there was a wide range of interpretations about these ideas. In the Argentine pedagogical field of this decade, the relationship between the State and the educationalists who promoted New School's ideas was not always characterized by imposition or transgression. The New School wasn't an outsider in the educational system and the educational policy received its influence. Argentine promoters of New School that gathered around La Obra tried to present themselves as innovators in terms of pedagogical knowledge in order to appear as the only group capable of transforming the educational system as well as the only qualified to become spokesman for all the teachers in the country. This paper will analyze the underlying logic of the speeches of teachers and educationalists. It will be stated throughout this article that even though the Argentine pedagogical field had close connections with politics, it also followed its own path. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
40. DISCURSOS , REPRESENTACIONES Y PRÁCTICAS EDUCATIVAS SOBRE EL CUERPO DE LOS ESCOLARES. ARGENTINA EN LAS PRIMERAS DÉCADAS DEL SIGLO XX.
- Author
-
Lionetti, Lucía
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL discipline , *EDUCATION , *CIVICS education , *HISTORY of schools , *SOCIALIZATION , *SOCIAL order , *CHILD psychology , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century ,20TH century medical history - Abstract
In the Modernity there was formed an idea of the body centred on the regulation of the life of the population (bios) and on the "disciplinamiento" of the body of the individuals (biopoder). In the beginning of the 20th century in Argentine, in the context of the "social question", one appealed to the representations concerning the idea of the social body and of the body of the individuals. To the body of the Nation he imagined it under the notions of disease and health, integration and exclusion. Since then, the metaphors of the social body have not stopped being present in the rhetoric of the national discourse in different contexts. This paper study the diffusion and intervention of the medical speech (hygienist and eugenista) in the school institution by the intention of acting on the body of the small students to the effects of moralizing his behaviors and of guaranteeing an integral formation that was preserving his physical and intellectual health while they were estimated as the civil futures of the republic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
41. Multicultural Education Before and After the Federal Multiculturalism Policy: A Case Study of the Board of Education of the City of Toronto.
- Author
-
JEAN-PIERRE, JOHANNE and NUNES, FERNANDO
- Subjects
- *
MULTICULTURAL education , *MULTICULTURALISM , *SCHOOL board policy , *SCHOOL boards , *EDUCATION , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
There exist different models of multicultural education that school boards can adopt such as the enrichment model, the enlightenment model, the empowerment model and the intercultural education model. This paper is a case study examining how, between 1960 and 1975, the Board of Education for the City of Toronto, experienced a paradigm shift in their approach towards immigrant students, from a focus on integration to an empowerment model of multicultural education. While in the sixties, the board promoted integration through their New Canadian classes, ESL classes and the promotion of heritage languages, after the adoption of the federal policy of Multiculturalism, the board demonstrated a change in the semantics related to diversity, an increase in its partnerships with community-based organizations and a new enthusiasm for bilin-gual/bicultural pilot projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Crossing borders: academic refugee women, education and the British Federation of University Women during the Nazi era.
- Author
-
Cohen, Susan
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN refugees , *BRITISH education system , *NATIONAL socialism & women , *WOMEN in public life , *ADULT education , *EDUCATION , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
This paper explores the educational experiences of a specific group of refugees, namely academic women refugees who were members of various branches of the International Federation of University Women, and who came to Britain under the auspices of the British Federation of University Women from 1933. As a result of voluntary or forced migration some 400 such women from Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Austria sought entry to Britain following Hitler's accession to power in Germany in 1933. The help they received from the specially formed Emergency Refugee Committee of the British Federation of University Women, not only in gaining entry to the country but in refashioning their pre-migration educational and academic achievements, is looked at in detail, and the extent to which the women were able to retrain, re-qualify or complete training courses curtailed by political events and migration is considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Recursos morales e historia moral en la obra de Jonathan Glover, Humanity.
- Author
-
Camacho, Luis
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *ETHICS , *MODERN civilization , *PHILOSOPHY - Abstract
When using history as a source of moral lessons, Glover assumes that his analysis is ethical in character and morally good. How to justify both assumptions is our aim in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
44. Nationalization campaigns and teachers' practices in Belgian–German and Polish–German border regions (1945–1956).
- Author
-
Venken, Machteld
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of education policy , *EDUCATION , *EDUCATION policy , *TEACHER selection , *TEACHER qualifications , *BORDERLANDS , *RECONSTRUCTION (1939-1951) , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,POLISH history -- 1945-1980 ,BELGIAN history, 1914- - Abstract
This contribution looks into nationalization and education in European borderlands in the early post-World War II period. Belonging to Belgium and Poland, respectively, in the interwar years, the Eupen–St. Vith–Malmedy and the East-Upper Silesia regions came under German rule during World War II. Returned to the Belgian and Polish nation-states once the war was over, the regions experienced a pronounced upheaval in the population profile as a result of population transfers and reorientations in education curricula. The aim of these measures was to guarantee the national reliability of borderland inhabitants, with a special role being designated for teachers, who were perceived as crucial in the raising of children as national citizens imbued with certain core values. This contribution compares the methods employed by the authorities in selecting educational personnel for their borderlands, the nationalizing role teachers were to play and the way teachers gave meaning to their professional practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.